Removes blanks or characters from the beginning of a string. You can use LTRIM with IIF or DECODE in an expression to avoid spaces in a target table.
If you do not specify a trim_set parameter in the expression, LTRIM removes only single-byte spaces.
If you use LTRIM to remove characters from a string, LTRIM compares the trim_set to each character in the string argument, character-by-character, starting with the left side of the string. If the character in the string matches any character in the trim_set, LTRIM removes it. LTRIM continues comparing and removing characters until it fails to find a matching character in the trim_set. Then it returns the string, which does not include matching characters.
Syntax
LTRIM( string [, trim_set] )
Arguments
Required/
Optional
Description
string
Required
Any string value. Passes the strings you want to modify. You can enter any valid expression. Use operators to perform comparisons or concatenate strings before removing characters from the beginning of a string.
trim_set
Optional
Any string value. Passes the characters you want to remove from the beginning of the first string. You can enter any valid expression. You can also enter a character string. However, you must enclose the characters you want to remove from the beginning of the string within single quotation marks, for example, 'abc'. If you omit the second string, the function removes any blanks from the beginning of the string.
LTRIM is case sensitive. For example, if you want to remove the 'A' character from the string 'Alfredo', you would enter 'A', not 'a'.
Return Value
String. The string values with the specified characters in the trim_set argument removed.
NULL if a value passed to the function is NULL. If the trim_set is NULL, the function returns NULL.
Example
The following expression removes the characters ‘S’ and ‘.’ from the strings in the LAST_NAME column:
LTRIM( LAST_NAME, 'S.')
LAST_NAME
RETURN VALUE
Nelson
Nelson
Osborne
Osborne
NULL
NULL
S. MacDonald
MacDonald
Sawyer
awyer
H. Bender
H. Bender
Steadman
teadman
LTRIM removes ‘S.’ from S. MacDonald and the ‘S’ from both Sawyer and Steadman, but not the period from H. Bender. This is because LTRIM searches, character-by-character, for the set of characters you specify in the trim_set argument. If the first character in the string matches the first character in the trim_set, LTRIM removes it. Then LTRIM looks at the second character in the string. If it matches the second character in the trim_set, LTRIM removes it, and so on. When the first character in the string does not match the corresponding character in the trim_set, LTRIM returns the string and evaluates the next row.
In the example of H. Bender, H does not match either character in the trim_set argument, so LTRIM returns the string in the LAST_NAME column and moves to the next row.
Tips
Use RTRIM and LTRIM with || or CONCAT to remove leading and trailing blanks after you concatenate two strings.
You can also remove multiple sets of characters by nesting LTRIM. For example, if you want to remove leading blanks and the character 'T' from a column of names, you might create an expression similar to the following: